Title of article :
Outcome of the Delorme procedure for the management of complete rectal prolapse in children
Author/Authors :
Rabae, Mohamed Minia University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of General Surgery, Egypt
From page :
260
To page :
266
Abstract :
Objectives The aim of the study was to evaluate the surgical and functional outcome of the Delorme procedure for the management of full-thickness long-segment rectal prolapse (RP) in children. Patients and methods This study included 23 patients with a mean age of 5.5 ± 2 years. The severity of incontinence and impact on quality of life (QOL) were evaluated using the Fecal Incontinence Severity Index (FISI) and the Fecal Incontinence Quality of Life (FIQL) questionnaires. The primary outcome was defi ned as complete recovery of continence, and partial improvement was defi ned as improvement in either type or frequency of incontinence or both. Recurrence was defi ned as recurrent incontinence after complete recovery. The secondary outcome was defi ned as change in the impact of incontinence on patients’ QOL as assessed by the FIQL questionnaire. Results The mean operative time was 60.7 ± 13 min, the mean time until the fi rst oral intake was 8.7 ± 3.9 h, and the mean postoperative hospital stay was 33.4 ± 12 h. All patients showed signifi cantly lower postoperative scores on individual items and the total FISI score. Surgical repair of RP showed a favorable outcome in the form of signifi cantly higher postoperative scores of individual items of the FIQL questionnaire, with a signifi cantly higher postoperative total FIQL score compared with preoperative scores. Throughout the follow-up duration of 25.6 ± 6.9 months, 18 patients (78.2%) showed complete recovery, four patients (17.4%) showed only partial improvement, and one patient (4.4%) developed recurrence of gas incontinence 6 months after the disappearance of his incontinence; however, in all fi ve patients there was an infrequent occurrence of incontinence at a frequency of 1–3 times/month. Conclusion The Delorme procedure is safe and effective for the management of complete RP, with a high complete recovery rate and ability to alleviate the adverse impact of fecal incontinence on QOL even in those with partial improvement. The reported advantages and outcome of the Delorme procedure in children and adulthood could enable discarding old concepts for restricted indications for the procedure for old and/or unfi t patients and could make it suitable for all cases with RP without limits of age or general condition.
Keywords :
complete rectal prolapse , Delorme procedure , outcome
Journal title :
The Egyptian Journal of Surgery
Journal title :
The Egyptian Journal of Surgery
Record number :
2547619
Link To Document :
بازگشت